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README.md

Debian headless/remote installation

Installing Debian is easy enough – but what if you have no physical access to the target machine or it has no screen or keyboard? Stock images require at least a few local key strokes before you can continue the installation, remotely...

This little tool will remaster a stock Debian image for 100% remote installation via ssh or serial console.

In a nutshell

# Edit the configuration variables
make config

# download the latest Debian netinst image for `ARCH`
make download

# Adapt preseed.cfg
edit preseed.cfg

# Build image
make image

# Write image to usb stick
make usb

Motivation

I wanted to install Debian on a server remotely – i.e. without keyboard access or the chance to peek at a physical screen. I found plenty of information on the net but none of the tutorials really worked for me. Some included preseeding the image but failed to automatically start the installation without a key press, others seemed to customize a zillion things but ended up getting stuck in some error message or other. The problem with ssh remote installation with stock images is that they still require some initial human interaction to select the desired menu option and some basic setup before the network is configured. That makes the whole point of remote installation moot...

So I read my way through lots of tutorials and put together a slim working solution – at least working for me. So here is my minimal and lazy solution to Debian headless installation image building. I mostly documented it for myself but maybe it's useful for someone out there.

My main intent was to connect to the ssh-server of the Debian installer. Another possible route for headless installation is via serial console. That can either be a physical RS-232 cable or a virtual serial port provided by a remote management module/software such as HPEs iLO or something similar.

Known quirks and issues

The Makefile we use here to implement all functionality intentionally lacks some of the typical Make magic: Targets don't track dependencies so you will have to rebuild everything, whenever you change something. So please make clean, first. Yes – a full build will cost you a valuable six seconds every time. Use them to worship code simplicity.

I didn't have much luck with booting i386 images via UEFI – neither the stock Debian images nor the remastered ones. But maybe it's just my particular machine/BIOS...

Dependencies

Make sure all necessary tools are installed:

make install-depends

Configuration

Edit Makevars and set the variables to match your situation. You can use

make config

to do so. This should work on most Debian-based systems. If it doesn't, just edit the Makevars file with your preferred text editor.

Image names, architecture and usb device

At the very minimum you need to set the following variables:

SOURCE: the name of your stock Debian ISO image file.

TARGET the name of the remastered ISO image.

ARCH indicates the target processor architecture – amd64 or i386 (other architectures are not supported). This variable is used to identify the installation folder in the image (install.amd) and to determine which image to download.

USBDEV is the device file that represents your usb stick. The latter is needed for make usb and make FAT. Be extra careful to set USBDEV correctly! If you set it incorrectly, you may overwrite your system disk!

LABEL is the CD volume label. It must be ≤ 32 chars in length.

Console parameters

While the main goal of this project was to allow installation via ssh, a serial console is an alternative in some cases.

The following default config for the serial console device should work most of the time:

CONSOLE = ttyS0,115200n8

When the serial console is active, all output is redirected to the serial interface and you will not see boot messages or the installer on a connected screen after that point. Accordingly, normal local installation will not work. If you want your image to allow local installation (i.e. non-headless), instead, you may set

CONSOLE = tty0

Download Debian installation image

You can just download the latest Debian netinst image with

make download

If this is not the image you want to start with, just download/provide one yourself and save it in the folder where this Makefile lives.

In any case, make sure to set the SOURCE variable in the config file (make config) to match the image name.

Preseeding

Preseeding is Debian's method of automatically answering some or all of the configuration questions you usually have to answer during the installation process.

You must provide a preseed.cfg file for headless installation!

The included preseed.cfg file configures the bare minimum to get past the installer questions so that network and ssh can be launched. Please edit the file – at least change the password...

If the minimal file does not cover all your needs, get a full template

make example-preseed.cfg
mv example-preseed.cfg preseed.cfg

and modify it to your needs. For comprehensive information on preseeding, study this:

https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/amd64/apb.en.html

or

https://www.debian.org/releases/stable/i386/apb.en.html

Building the ISO

make clean
make image

Manual modifications to the image

For experts, only! If you know what you are doing, you can now enter the tmp folder and add packages, edit files etc. You can find some information on what you can do here. But you don't need to manually follow the steps for re-creating md5 sums and assembling the image.

To pack your changes into the image just run the last steps manually, again:

make md5sums
make iso

Dry run it

This step is optional but may save you a lot of trouble later.

make qemu-bios
make qemu-uefi

This will fire up a QEMU session booting your new image.

You can follow the boot process in the emulator and eventually connect to the installer like this:

ssh installer@localhost -p22222

Or via serial console:

telnet localhost 33333

So you can test-drive the installation before trying it on a real server. The default password is r00tme – please change it in the preseeding file. Alternatively, you can configure passwordless login via ssh key file – there is example code in the preseed.cfg. For this to work, you need to provide the key file from a local web server. In pinch, this may be all you need:

python3 -m http.server

And here a little screenshot of what that looks like in qemu. The two bottom panels show the local screen (left) and the serial console (right):

Write to usb stick or burn cd

If you still have a cdrom drive, use your favorite ISO burner to write the image to cd. I can't find my old usb-cd drive and prefer using a usb stick, anyway:

Insert a USB stick and find out its device file

lsblk

Double check, that USBDEV is set correctly in Makevars.

Caution: The next two steps will write to the device configured in the USBDEV. If you failed to set that correctly, you will overwrite whatever disk happens to be associated with that device!

Write the image to the stick:

make usb

Add a FAT partition to the stick:

make FAT

This may be useful if you need to add custom firmware files or anything else you would like to use during installation.

Remote Installation via ssh

Insert the USB stick (or CD) in the target system and power it up. Wait a few minutes for the installer to boot and bring up the network. Find out the IP address of the machine (e.g. from the router/DHCP server). Alternatively, configure static IP in the preseed file. Once the system is up you should be able to ping it. Now log in and complete the installation remotely:

ssh installer@yourmachine

The default password is r00tme; it can (and should!) be configured in the preseeding file. Alternatively, you can configure passwordless login via ssh key file – there is example code in the preseed.cfg. For this to work, you need to provide the key file from a local web server.

NOTE: The included minimal preseed.cfg assumes that you are connected via LAN cable (as a server should be). If you want to/must use a WIFI connection you need to configure this.

Remote installation via serial console

If the serial interface was configured correctly, you should be able to connect through a terminal program (cu, minicom, etc.) via serial interface. E.g.

cu -l /dev/ttyUSB0 -s 115200 

or

screen /dev/ttyUSB0 115200

Where /dev/ttyUSB0 is the serial interface on your local computer which is connected to the server.

In the case of a virtual serial interface in iLO (or similar), please refer to the manufacturers instructions on how to connect to it.

Random notes

Just because it took me a while to realize: The Debian remote-installer uses screen to provide multiple virtual consoles. You can switch between them with CTRL-a TAB. See man screen for more information.